Chrissy Teigen ROASTS those involved in Operation Varsity Blues with hilarious photoshop of her and John Legend on soccer player bodies

Chrissy Teigen was among many social media users who skewered those involved in the Operation Varsity Blues scandal on Twitter.

Lori Loughlin and Felicity Huffman headline the list of 50 people charged on Tuesday in the scheme to help wealthy Americans cheat their children's way into universities.

In many cases admissions consultant William 'Rick' Singer used photoshop or passed off photos of others with the knowledge of parents of parents who paid him hundreds of thousands of dollars would fraudulently get their children into top universities.

Hilarious: Chrissy Teigen was among many social media users who skewered those involved in the Operation Varsity Blues scandal on Twitter

The 33-year-old model posted a hilarious photoshop on Twitter of herself and John Legend superimposed on soccer player bodies.

Chrissy had her face put on Columbia National Team's Carlos Valderrama while 40-year-old John was put on Portugal National Team's Cristiano Ronaldo.

Also included in the hilarious photoshop were celeb hairstylist Jen Atkin on Manchester United's Wayne Rooney and her photographer husband Mike Rosenthal on the body of the LA Galaxy.

She captioned it 'does this look real? we are trying to get into harvard @jenatkinhair @mrmikerosenthal @johnlegend.'

Tough times: Felicity Huffman (right leaving court) and Lori Loughlin (left in December) headline the list of 50 people charged on Tuesday in the scheme to help wealthy Americans cheat their children's way into universities

Actresses Loughlin and Huffman as well as their families were dealing with the fallout from scamming to get their children into college, their fellow stars were busy roasting them on Twitter .

Fifty parents and coaches were charged on Tuesday in a plot to get their children into schools including Georgetown, Stanford, UCLA, University of San Diego, USC, University of Texas, Wake Forest and Yale.

The scheme involved parents paying bribes of between $100,000 to $2.5 million to get their children into elite schools.

Funny: Many used scenes from Loughlin's TV show Full House and her character Aunt Becky to poke fun of her following the charges, including comedian Travon Free

'I went to Harvard to be an Instagrammer': Olivia Munn also skewered those involved in the scam

In many instances, authorities said the children were unaware that their parents had paid these bribes.

Most of those charged either paid to get higher SAT scores or faked an athletic resume that, with the participation of a bribed college coach, helped the children get accepted to a college as a team's recruit.

Federal prosecutors in Boston charged William 'Rick' Singer, 58, with running the racketeering scheme through his Edge College & Career Network. His network served a roster of clients including actresses and chief executives.